Check

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King James Dictionary [1]

CHECK,

1. To stop to restrain to hinder to curb. It signifies to put an entire stop to motion, or to restrain its violence, and cause an abatement to moderate.

2. To rebuke to chide or reprove.

3. To compare any paper with its counterpart or with a cipher, with a view to ascertain its authenticity to compare corresponding papers to control by a counter-register.

4. In seamenship, to ease of a little of a rope, which is too stiffly extended also, to stopper the cable.

CHECK,

1. To stop to make a stop with at.

The mid checks at any vigorous undertaking.

2. To clash or interfere.

I love to check with business.

3. To strike with repression.

CHECK, n.

1. A stop hindrance rebuff sudden restraint, or continued restraint curb control government.

2. That which stops or restrains, as reproof, reprimand, rebuke, slight or disgust, fear, apprehension, a person any stop or obstruction.

3. In falconry, when a hawk forsakes her proper game, to follow rooks, pies, or other fowls, that cross her in her flight.

4. The correspondent cipher of a bank note a corresponding indenture any counter-register.

5. A term in chess, when one party obliges the other either to move or guard his king.

6. An order for money, drawn on a banker or on the cashier of a bank, payable to the bearer.

This is a sense derived from that in definition 4.

7. In popular use, checkered cloth check, for checkered.

Check or check-roll, a roll or book containing the names of persons who are attendants and in the pay of a king or great personage, as domestic servants.

Clerk of the check, in the British Kings household, has the check and control of the yeomen of the guard, and all the ushers belonging to the royal family, the care of the watch, &c.

Clerk of the check, in the British Royal Dock-Yards, is an officer who keeps a register of all the men employed on board his majestys ships and vessels, and of all the artificers in the service of the navy, at the port where he is settled.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [2]

( מוּסר , mūṣār ): Occurs in Job 20:3 the King James Version, "I have heard the check of my reproach" (the Revised Version (British and American) "the reproof which putteth me to shame"), i.e. a check or reproof, such as that which closes the last speech of Job (chapter 19), and intended to put Zophar to shame.

References